How The Republican Party Became A Party That Believes The Constitution Only Applies To Its Enemies
from the a-constitutional-charade dept
Let’s talk about constitutional hypocrisy so brazen, so comprehensive, so morally bankrupt that it would be laughable if it weren’t so dangerous to the republic.
I’ve learned something about modern Republicans that crystallizes everything wrong with our current political moment: they care more about the constitutionality of Biden’s student debt forgiveness than they do about the 4th and 5th Amendments being universally applied. Let that sink in for a moment.
They’ll spend months screaming about executive overreach when it comes to loan forgiveness—a legitimate constitutional concern, to be fair. But when it comes to the systematic violation of due process rights, when it comes to warrantless searches and seizures, when it comes to the weaponization of law enforcement against political opponents—suddenly, constitutional principles become negotiable.
This isn’t principled constitutional interpretation. This is weaponized constitutionalism—using the Constitution as a cudgel against political enemies while ignoring it entirely when it constrains their own power.
Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And the Republican Party has become a fascist organization that simply doesn’t think the Constitution applies to them.
We’ve never seen anything like this in either party in our history until now. Not during the Civil War, when Lincoln suspended habeas corpus but acknowledged he was acting in constitutional gray areas. Not during World War II, when FDR interned Japanese Americans but at least maintained the pretense that all citizens deserved constitutional protection. Not during Watergate, when even Nixon’s defenders argued he was acting within presidential prerogatives rather than claiming he was above the law entirely.
What we’re witnessing now is different. It’s a party that wants power, and it wants that power to be unchallenged by legal or democratic constraints. It’s pushing in every direction it can to solidify its grip on power—from trying to steal elections (like they attempted in North Carolina recently) to illegally shutting down entire government departments mandated by Congress because they perceive them to be filled with ideological enemies.
This is a coup. And the entire party is participating in it.
It wasn’t always this way. The Republican Party once had genuine constitutional conservatives—people like Barry Goldwater, who famously said “Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice, but moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue,” yet still believed in constitutional constraints on power. People like John McCain, who defended the independence of democratic institutions even when it hurt him politically. People like Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, who put constitutional duty above party loyalty.
But here’s what happened: the Republicans who were actually committed to constitutional government were systematically purged from the party. They were branded “RINOs”—Republicans In Name Only—for the sin of believing that constitutional principles should apply even when inconvenient. They were primaried out by candidates who promised more aggressive partisan warfare. They found the door themselves when they could no longer stomach what their party was becoming.
The result is a party that has been hollowed out of anyone who might provide internal resistance to authoritarian drift. The constitutional conservatives didn’t change their principles—they were driven out for having principles at all.
What remains is a party captured by people who view constitutional constraints as obstacles to be overcome rather than principles to be upheld. They kept the constitutional rhetoric—it polls well and provides useful cover—but abandoned the constitutional substance entirely.
The constitutional charade works like this: When Democrats exercise executive power, Republicans discover a sudden, passionate commitment to constitutional limits, separation of powers, and congressional prerogatives. But when Republicans exercise power, these same principles become obstacles to effective governance that must be swept aside in the name of efficiency, national security, or fighting the “deep state.”
Student loan forgiveness? Constitutional crisis! The president can’t possibly have that authority! Where’s Congress? What about the separation of powers?
Defying Supreme Court orders? Well, the Court overstepped its bounds. The executive has inherent authority. Sometimes you have to break a few constitutional eggs to make an authoritarian omelet.
Weaponizing the Justice Department against political opponents? That’s just effective law enforcement. Besides, those people are criminals anyway—due process is a technicality that gets in the way of justice.
Shutting down congressionally mandated agencies? Congress doesn’t understand the complexities of modern governance. The executive knows best. Constitutional requirements are suggestions.
This selective constitutionalism reveals what the modern Republican Party has become: an organization that uses constitutional language tactically while abandoning constitutional principles strategically. The Constitution is useful when it can be weaponized against opponents and inconvenient when it constrains their own authority.
And anybody who claims to oppose this but strategically votes Republican over some issue like trans rights or “woke” culture or taxes is a fool. And a moral traitor to the country.
I don’t care how much you hate progressive social policies. I don’t care how frustrated you are with Democratic economic proposals. I don’t care how offended you are by campus speech codes or diversity training or whatever cultural issue keeps you up at night.
None of that—none of it—justifies voting for a party that has abandoned constitutional government entirely. When you vote for Republicans because you’re angry about trans athletes or critical race theory, you’re not making a strategic choice about policy priorities. You’re voting to end constitutional democracy in America.
You’re saying that your cultural grievances matter more than the rule of law. That your policy preferences matter more than the Constitution itself. That your ideological comfort matters more than preserving the system that makes democratic debate possible in the first place.
This isn’t hyperbole. This isn’t partisan exaggeration. This is the documented reality of what the Republican Party has become: an organization dedicated to establishing one-party rule through the systematic dismantling of constitutional constraints on power.
The tragedy is that the party once had voices who might have prevented this transformation. But they were systematically silenced, marginalized, and expelled for the sin of taking constitutional principles seriously. What remains is a hollowed-out shell using constitutional rhetoric to justify unconstitutional behavior.
And to argue that the GOP is the better party for judicial matters while that very party is actively trying to turn public opinion against the judiciary? That’s very special indeed.
They spent decades building the conservative legal movement, appointing originalist judges, claiming they were restoring respect for the Constitution and the rule of law. And now, when those same courts occasionally issue rulings they don’t like, suddenly the judiciary is illegitimate, biased, part of the “deep state” conspiracy against real Americans.
The Supreme Court isn’t conservative enough when it occasionally rules against Republican interests. Lower courts are activist when they enforce constitutional rights. The entire federal judiciary becomes suspect when it tries to maintain some independence from partisan political pressure.
This is how authoritarianism works: first you capture institutions, then you delegitimize any institution you can’t fully control. First you pack the courts with ideological allies, then you attack the courts when even your allies occasionally follow the law instead of your preferences.
We are watching the live-action implementation of fascism in America, carried out by people who wrap themselves in the flag while systematically destroying what that flag represents. They invoke the Constitution while violating its most basic principles. They claim to defend democracy while working to dismantle democratic institutions.
And the most morally disgusting part? They expect us to treat this as normal political competition. They expect us to pretend that this is just another partisan disagreement, just another election cycle, just another policy debate between competing visions of American governance.
It’s not. This is a party that has purged its constitutional conservatives and embraced authoritarianism. This is a party that believes the Constitution applies to its enemies but not to itself. This is a party that will use any means necessary to gain and maintain power, including the systematic destruction of the legal and institutional frameworks that make democratic self-governance possible.
If you vote for this party for any reason—if you prioritize any policy preference over the preservation of constitutional democracy—you are complicit in the destruction of the American republic. You are helping to dismantle the system that makes political disagreement possible in the first place.
The constitutional conservatives didn’t abandon the Republican Party. The Republican Party abandoned them. What remains is the advancing edge of American fascism dressed up in constitutional rhetoric.
Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And anyone who can’t see that the modern Republican Party represents an existential threat to constitutional democracy is either willfully blind or actively complicit in its destruction.
The center must be held. And holding it requires recognizing that there is no center left in the Republican Party—only the hollowed-out shell of what was once a constitutional conservative movement, now captured entirely by forces that view the Constitution as an obstacle rather than a foundation.
Choose accordingly.
Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus.
Filed Under: civil liberties, constitution, donald trump, double standard, due process, maga, principles, republicans, rino


Comments on “How The Republican Party Became A Party That Believes The Constitution Only Applies To Its Enemies”
In my professional opinion, the Republicans are using an effective legal strategy of the Double Standard.
Re:
It’s not a double standard. It’s no standards at all. They don’t even care if they contradict themselves from 30 seconds ago (“fake news, that never happened”), all they care about is winning- cemementing power and enriching themselves, regardless of the cost to their constituents, the country, or the planet.
And their base is so preprogrammed to swallow any lie that by the time they realize the leopards are eating their faces too, it’s already way too late.
The thing that gets me is that a third of the country are in this boat, and another significant percentage simply doesn’t care one way or the other that the country is quickly sliding into a fascist hellstate.
It’s not just this republican party that’s the issue, it’s been a systemic problem for decades that the current GOP have been able to build on and exploit.
The answer is not just to kick out the fascists, but to build a better system in terms of education, social awareness, and legal protections to stop them getting into power in the first place.
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Except they do apply standards to Democrats.
Hence, double-standard.
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It’s not so much a standard as a trick to make the Dems shut up. Most Dems do believe in standards, so it’s a handy tool to beat them with it.
But the Republicans themselves will break every rule, and they know that their base doesn’t care. On their side of the aisle, having double standards is a feature, not a bug.
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I think it’s less that they’ve been brainwashed to believe any lie as that they’ve been brainwashed to believe that they’re such a majority that they can’t possibly lose and so they don’t need to worry about whether the rules will ever be applied to them. What it’ll take to break that mindset is a sudden event that causes the rules they so love to see applied to others applied to them in such numbers that a majority of them have to accept that it does affect them.
Education doesn’t work on people who don’t want to be educated. Social awareness doesn’t work on people who don’t want to be aware of anything beyond their tight circle of friends. Fear, that works on everybody.
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I’m curious to see how long it’s going to take until they pull a 180 on the Minnesota assassin: not only stop denying he was one of them, but start valorizing him.
Y’all know damn well it’s going to happen. Just a question of when.
John Wilkes Booth is as responsible as anyone for modern conservatism.
Inb4 the label-switching games here. It was conservatives who fought to conserve slavery.
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The USA has always been this way
It’s just now, that forces are being brought to bear against US citizens, that you suddenly are concerned. When the USA had used force and violence against others you had no problem with that. Only now are you concerned. Fucking hypocrites.
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Feel free to leave if you don’t like the subjects this blog chooses to cover.
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Feel free to pipe down if the truth hurts too much.
The Constitution has been ‘just a suggestion’ for decades. Power factions would always find ways to massage around it when it suited them, especially when they could do so on foreign soil. The only difference now is that the old order understood it was all an elaborate game and danced the dance, MAGA is the drunk uncle saying the quiet parts out loud.
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I hope they don’t pay you very much, because you are a shit agent.
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You might be forgiven your ignorance if we consider the likelihood that your handlers only feed you propaganda, but plenty of us have been protesting this since the Reagan years.
Search for protests against George H. W. Bush and the Iraq War. Search for protests against George W. Bush and the 2nd Iraq War and the invasion of Afghanistan.
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It’s only recently that Trump has been using force against China (in the form of coercionary tariffs), actually.
When 'hypocrisy' is a core pillar of your party's identity...
If double-standards weren’t a thing republicans wouldn’t have any standards at all.
What started in 1933 never stopped.
The one proposition of conservatism
One of the most important observations about modern politics was made as a comment on a random blog post in 2018. You may have read this now-famous excerpt:
However, I commend the entire original comment to your attention. It can be found at https://crookedtimber.org/2018/03/21/liberals-against-progressives/#comment-729288
In addition to that proposition, it asserts that there is now and always has been only conservatism. For there to be true anti-conservatism, we would need to dedicate ourselves to this proposition instead:
And the big question is, when will the citizens in those republican controlled seats hold their reps accountable? The dismantling of the constitution is only possible because the people voted in politicians that allowed this situation to happen in the first place.
Regardless of why they allowed it to happen, people are allowing this dismantling to continue in their name.
Um, yeah.
If you look far enough back in the archives of this blog site, you will find dozens of instances in which forth and fifth amendment protections have been carved out in favor of law enforcement illegally (or unethically) obtaining evidence.
Law protects the privilege and makes the unprivileged easy to prosecute. The same can be said of the Constitution of the United States, not because our judges and lawyers are sharp like Cardinal Richelieu, but because they openly opine in favor of the folks they like and against the folks they don’t like, often based on skin color, and our means to check them are toothless.
In 2025 we are seeing the unlubed natural consequences of letting years of selective enforcement go by.
The leopards are out in battalions, and it’s face-eating season.
You're Still Catching Up
MAGA Militia are murdering Democrat politicians.
This is a civil war.
If you’re idiot enough to believe that ‘lone wolf’ shooters are independent events, that there’s no connection between Trump’s pardon of the militia with which he sent a death squad to kill the Vice President and other lawmakers, if you’re only just now noticing the fascism (you wouldn’t want to use the word ‘fascism’ that’s too loaded), can you at least admit that a minority of fundamentalist evangelical extremists has executed a coup over the entire country and is systematically invading “democrat power centers” to depose lawfully elected representatives.
This is a civil war, and you’re just realizing the Republicans are fighting it, but they’re all fighting it. They are lawless, authoritarian thugs. They’re ignorant religious zealots.
They’re killers and they cover for killers.